Thank you! Would you recommend reproofing it afterwards or isn't it necessary?Plenty of hot soapy water, a soft bristle brush (the ones on a pole you can plug a hose onto are ideal) a bit of elbow grease, followed by a good rinse (of the awning not you) with a hosepipe, and leave it to air dry.
Job done.
Not necessarily.Surely it will need reproofing especially the area "scrubbed" with soapy water
Think it's the thread used in the stitching that expands when wet.Not necessarily.
All new awnings come with a warning that they will leak until exposed to weather, rain. This causes the fabric fibres to expand making them water tight.
The OP did not mention a new awning at all so why mention one, and yes re proof would be needed if awning washed using "soapy water"Not necessarily.
All new awnings come with a warning that they will leak until exposed to weather, rain. This causes the fabric fibres to expand making them water tight.
He didn’t . I did as an example. The OP didn’t specify the material .The OP did not mention a new awning at all so why mention one, and yes re proof would be needed if awning washed using "soapy water"
Its a second hand Kampa Air Awning (and he is a she 😉)He didn’t . I did as an example. The OP didn’t specify the material .
Thank you, ladies are always welcome..Its a second hand Kampa Air Awning (and he is a she 😉)
Thank you, that's helpful. We've only just bought it (second hand) and don't have a liner so I'll have a look at getting one as it sounds usefulThank you, ladies are always welcome..
I too have a Kampa, a Rallye air 390. The material is not cotton, the roof is impermeable and as such imo does not need reproofing even after washing with soapy water.
However resealing will do no harm especially around the seams so all rather academic bearing in mind how cheap sealer sprays are.
Good luck.
Do you use a ceiling roof liner to avoid condensation drips. My 10 year old Kampa was notorious for condensation.
Thank you, that's really helpful. What sort of soap solution do you use, any particular brand?Awnings do stain over time and trying to remove some stains is impossible, there used to be a company that would chemically clean your awning to "as new" appearance and then re-proof it for you, haven't seen them advertising for a while though.
We have an Isabella air awning (Cirrus) that is now 4 years old and it has some marks and stains. I wash it once a year with a very hot mild soap solution used on stains, this removes around 85% of the stain and has (so far) had no ill-effect on it's water-proofing properties.
It was one of the mild soaps for sensitive skin made by E45.Thank you, that's really helpful. What sort of soap solution do you use, any particular brand?